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ploto
10-31-2012, 11:39 PM
The last-minute decision by Romney high command Monday to suspend politics while Sandy raged sent aides in Ohio scrambling to convert a scheduled victory rally into an apolitical "storm relief event" — a process that tested the campaign's agility and left a few threads of partisanship inadvertently hanging.

On Monday morning, Romney's local team in Dayton was eagerly preparing to host the candidate the following day. A high school gym had been reserved, a stage had been rented, and a pair of celebrity guests — country singer Randy Owen and NASCAR driver Richard Petty — had been booked to give the event some B-list heft.

Then, a little before noon, communications director Gail Gitcho announced the cancellation of "all events currently scheduled" for Tuesday. The superstorm that forecasters had been warning about for days had picked up steam, and people throughout the Northeast were now bracing for the worst. In a statement, Gitcho said the decision to cancel campaign events had been made "out of sensitivity to the millions of Americans in the path of Hurricane Sandy."

But Boston wasn't quite ready to lose a full day of swing state visibility with a week left in the race. So, after some deliberation, the campaign decided to use their existing venue in Ohio to stage a makeshift and nonpartisan humanitarian project. It would be a way for Romney to show leadership — and get on the local news — without looking craven or opportunistic.

The cryptic advisory went out to press several hours later, announcing the time and location of a "storm relief event" on Tuesday. As Sandy made landfall in New Jersey, Romney's campaign jet carried the candidate, along with his staff and traveling press corps, back to Ohio after an afternoon rally in Davenport, Iowa.

Meanwhile, on the ground in Dayton, aides were working feverishly to depoliticize the planned event. Campaign signs were removed from the premises, long rows of folding tables were set up, and logistics were painstakingly arranged to accomodate physical donations.

"It took the production company and event staff on-site some time to ensure that it was converted into a space which was suitable for the needs of a relief effort," said one staffer who was there.

The plan was for supporters to bring hurricane relief supplies to the event and then deliver the bags of canned goods, packages of diapers, and cases of water bottles to the candidate, who would be perched behind a table along with a slew of volunteers and his Ohio right-hand man, Senator Rob Portman. To complete the project and photo op, Romney would lead his crew in carrying the goods out of the gymnasium and into the Penske rental truck parked outside.

But the last-minute nature of the call for donations left some in the campaign concerned that they would end up with an empty truck. So the night before the event, campaign aides went to a local Wal-Mart and spent $5,000 on granola bars, canned food, and diapers to put on display while they waited for donations to come in, according to one staffer. (The campaign confirmed that it "did donate supplies to the relief effort," but would not specify how much it spent.)

At more senior levels of the campaign, careful consideration was being given to the tone of the program, officials said. Romney would scrap his normal stump speech and replace it with brief, optimistic remarks on the spirit of volunteerism. And Owen would still perform with his band, but he would refrain from cheerleading his candidate, and instead talk about the devastation he saw in Alabama after tornadoes tore through his home state last year.

When showtime arrived the following morning, local campaign staffers were pleasantly surprised by their supporters' generosity.

"We were incredibly pleased with the outpouring of support we received from volunteers and generous contributors from southwest and central Ohio," said Christopher Maloney, Romney's Ohio spokesman, adding, "We’re pleased that Ohio could play a role, albeit a minor one, in the relief effort."

But the event had its hitches. When reporters arrived on site ahead of the candidate, they were given press badges describing the event as a "victory rally" — a result, one aide told BuzzFeed, of the event's last-minute repurposing. He said the badges were printed Monday morning, before the change had been announced.

And shortly thereafter, the two large projector screens near the ceiling lit up with a glossy, 10-minute biographical video about the candidate, one that debuted at the Republican National Convention. A state campaign official blamed "someone from the audiovisual team" for playing the video without the campaign's permission.

But reporters, many of whom had spent the night before glued to hotel television sets watching their hometown of New York get ravaged by the hurricane, were sensitive to the hints of politics at the event and took to Twitter to voice their skepticism.

By the time Romney's motorcade rolled up to the high school, the projector screens were displaying Red Cross donation information, and grocery bags stuffed with supplies were piled up in a corner of the gym.

Romney kept his speech brief, expressing concern for the victims of the storm, while trying to keep the mood of the event upbeat. Standing on a small platform, he recalled a time in high school when he and his classmates were charged with cleaning up a football field covered in garbage.

“The person who was responsible for organizing the effort said, 'Just line up along the yard lines,'" the candidate said. "'You go between the goal line and the 10-yard line. And the next person, between 10 and 20, and then just walk through and do your lane. And if everybody cleans their line, why, we’ll be able to get the job done.'"

"And so today," he went on. "We are cleaning one lane, if you will."

The crowd of about 2,000 erupted in applause.

But even as Romney, clad in blue jeans and rolled-up sleeves, hustled around his area of the gym, shaking hands, thanking supporters, and stacking cases of bottled water on top of each other, signs of stagecraft remained.

As supporters lined up to greet the candidate, a young volunteer in a Romney/Ryan T-shirt stood near the tables, his hands cupped around his mouth, shouting, "You need a donation to get in line!"

Empty-handed supporters pled for entrance, with one woman asking, "What if we dropped off our donations up front?"

The volunteer gestured toward a pile of groceries conveniently stacked near the candidate. "Just grab something," he said.

Two teenage boys retrieved a jar of peanut butter each, and got in line. When it was their turn, they handed their "donations" to Romney. He took them, smiled, and offered an earnest "Thank you."

http://www.buzzfeed.com/mckaycoppins/the-making-of-romneys-storm-relief-event

boutons_deux
11-01-2012, 05:49 AM
Repugs know nothing but fraud and lies.

101A
11-01-2012, 06:15 AM
So when the President performs admirably; Christie says so.

When Romney's team converts a campaign stop to a donation center, the campaign donates AND other people show up with donations - it's craven.

If one approaches that event and views it through cynical goggles, one could certainly draw the conclusions you have. The same could be said of the President's actions. Chris Christie, a Republican, has chosen to be bigger than that cynic. Others have not.

ploto
11-01-2012, 06:52 AM
If one approaches that event and views it through cynical goggles, one could certainly draw the conclusions you have. The same could be said of the President's actions. Chris Christie, a Republican, has chosen to be bigger than that cynic. Others have not.

It is not cynical to find out the truth. The Romney campaign bought the stuff and then gave it to people to hand to Romney like they were making donations. Donations that, by the way, Romney claimed were for the Red Cross when the Red Cross does not even accept donations of canned foods and other similar items.

101A
11-01-2012, 07:05 AM
It is not cynical to find out the truth. The Romney campaign bought the stuff and then gave it to people to hand to Romney like they were making donations. Donations that, by the way, Romney claimed were for the Red Cross when the Red Cross does not even accept donations of canned foods and other similar items.


If people came to see Romney, but failed to bring a donation; should you disappoint them, and make their trip in vain, or help them out?

Also, it is ham-fisted, and someone ought to get fired for collecting items the Red Cross doesn't necessarily want - but someone obviously caught the mistake, and put the donation request on the big screens. BTW, my church has been collecting canned goods, blankets, etc for the victims; what is their motive?

Only one person actually gets to be president, and hand out Federal $$$$$ (other peoples money) at times like this; and get droves of credit for it. The Romney campaign stopped business as usual, and used a local venue it already had scheduled to do something hurricane related. He didn't rent a chopper and "survey the damage"....which he could have done (and the cynic in me assumes he might still do), but he also didn't disappear into a hole a week before the election. What could he have POSSIBLY done that you wouldn't have scoffed at?

BTW, the president certainly didn't ask anyone to turn off the cameras during his activities.

ChumpDumper
11-01-2012, 10:17 AM
What could he have POSSIBLY done that you wouldn't have scoffed at?He could have not faked things so badly.

boutons_deux
11-01-2012, 10:46 AM
Like McLiar/pitbull bitich, the Repug primary season vomiting up Gecko/Ryan for the WH is an insult to America, all of which isn't as stupid, indoctrinated, racist as the Repug base.

TeyshaBlue
11-01-2012, 11:07 AM
If people came to see Romney, but failed to bring a donation; should you disappoint them, and make their trip in vain, or help them out?

Also, it is ham-fisted, and someone ought to get fired for collecting items the Red Cross doesn't necessarily want - but someone obviously caught the mistake, and put the donation request on the big screens. BTW, my church has been collecting canned goods, blankets, etc for the victims; what is their motive?

Only one person actually gets to be president, and hand out Federal $$$$$ (other peoples money) at times like this; and get droves of credit for it. The Romney campaign stopped business as usual, and used a local venue it already had scheduled to do something hurricane related. He didn't rent a chopper and "survey the damage"....which he could have done (and the cynic in me assumes he might still do), but he also didn't disappear into a hole a week before the election. What could he have POSSIBLY done that you wouldn't have scoffed at?

BTW, the president certainly didn't ask anyone to turn off the cameras during his activities.

lol. A planned campaign stop was repurposed at the last moment. Now, it's a huge affront.

lol manufactured outrage.

boutons_deux
11-01-2012, 11:12 AM
"A planned campaign stop was repurposed at the last moment"

Gecko is an "entitled to secrecy" fraud and liar. He's a bad joke on USA.

TeyshaBlue
11-01-2012, 11:25 AM
Where's the meme for this? Surely a blog has produced one by now.

RandomGuy
11-01-2012, 12:47 PM
So when the President performs admirably; Christie says so.

When Romney's team converts a campaign stop to a donation center, the campaign donates AND other people show up with donations - it's craven.

If one approaches that event and views it through cynical goggles, one could certainly draw the conclusions you have. The same could be said of the President's actions. Chris Christie, a Republican, has chosen to be bigger than that cynic. Others have not.

Yeah. This is another tempest in a teacup. Not as big a deal as Democrats would wish it to be, IMO.

Plenty of other stuff to criticize Romney for really cynical manipulation of opinion and lying.

RandomGuy
11-01-2012, 12:50 PM
I would be interested though, as to what ultimately happened to the stuff donated from the event.

THAT would be something to hold the campaign accountable for. As long as it went to the Red Cross, and not back to feed interns at the campaign HQ, I can shrug off the photo-op.

101A
11-01-2012, 01:40 PM
I would be interested though, as to what ultimately happened to the stuff donated from the event.

THAT would be something to hold the campaign accountable for. As long as it went to the Red Cross, and not back to feed interns at the campaign HQ, I can shrug off the photo-op.

If somehow those goods were not donated, hypocrisy not withstanding, Romney's organization would have to be found just too stupid to run the country. His campaign, at least as of late, has been tight enough that I don't think they are.

RandomGuy
11-01-2012, 02:39 PM
If somehow those goods were not donated, hypocrisy not withstanding, Romney's organization would have to be found just too stupid to run the country. His campaign, at least as of late, has been tight enough that I don't think they are.

Eyup.

Also a better, more valid criticism:


“However well Mr. Romney’s piles of cans may have worked for him as a photo-op, that’s not actually what the Red Cross wants or needs people to do to actually help,” she continued.

The Red Cross website says, “Unfortunately, due to logistical constraints the Red Cross does not accept or solicit individual donations or collections of items. Items such as collected food, used clothing and shoes must be sorted, cleaned, repackaged and transported which impedes the valuable resources of money, time, and personnel…Financial contributions allow the Red Cross to buy exactly what is needed for a disaster relief operation.”

Raw Story (http://s.tt/1rtS3)

Red Cross needs checks, not cans. They say this ALL the time.

Romney's staff is guilty of not doing their homework, but that isn't all that bad, given short notice.

Less than optimal (oh yeah, I went there), but not really any stinging indictment.

DUNCANownsKOBE
11-01-2012, 02:46 PM
This really isn't a positive or negative for Romney. Like I said before, how charitable/not charitable Romney has been in life doesn't mean shit.

If he was president and got his way by dismantling FEMA and leaving disasters completely to the states, those areas would have totally erupted in chaos with no end in sight.

ploto
11-01-2012, 03:25 PM
I would be interested though, as to what ultimately happened to the stuff donated from the event.

THAT would be something to hold the campaign accountable for. As long as it went to the Red Cross, and not back to feed interns at the campaign HQ, I can shrug off the photo-op.

Last info was that the Red Cross has said it with work with the Romney campaign to figure out a way for them to process all this stuff. Which means - that the Red Cross is going to divert people from their usual tasks in a time of disaster to figure this out because they surely do not want to look bad and turn it down.

Now, the Romney campaign is also saying Romney sent the Red Cross a personal check.

TeyshaBlue
11-01-2012, 03:31 PM
Good. More manufactured outrage.

clambake
11-01-2012, 03:44 PM
Good. More manufactured outrage.

but he's a genius bizness guy, but he don't know he's interfering with staff coordination?

clearly, strippin companies is his forte!!!!!

clambake
11-01-2012, 03:55 PM
"Mitt Romney brings Red Cross efforts to a screeching halt for photo-op"

i wonder how many died because of this.

Drachen
11-01-2012, 03:57 PM
Work with the romney campain could also mean that the romney campaign is going to donate volunteers to sort/clean/deliver the goods. Manufactured outrage indeed.

ChumpDumper
11-01-2012, 04:44 PM
So basically, the efficiency of an actual relief effort was sacrificed for photo ops.

Hard to get too outraged about it, but it is a waste.

Koolaid_Man
11-01-2012, 05:01 PM
Willard is a ruthless suma bitch....surprising for a Morman...a family values guy.

Clipper Nation
11-01-2012, 05:04 PM
Willard with the laughable attempt at lying, per par... :lol

101A
11-02-2012, 09:51 AM
Now, the Romney campaign is also saying Romney sent the Red Cross a personal check.

I should run that campaign....THAT's a photo-op:

Get one of those big assed, Publisher's Clearinghouse checks big "Mitt Romney" signature on the bottom - $50 million big ones

"I am here spending MY OWN MONEY to help the relief effort, while the President spends YOUR GRANDCHILDREN'S!!!"

101A
11-02-2012, 09:52 AM
...of course then, the libs would be all up in arms because he HAS that much money in the first place.

Nevermind.

TeyshaBlue
11-02-2012, 10:49 AM
More outrage!

clambake
11-02-2012, 10:51 AM
so, he threw money as a deflection!!!!!!

TeyshaBlue
11-02-2012, 11:46 AM
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/FfdJdZ5_guM/0.jpg